Alice, or the Mysteries — Complete. Эдвард Бульвер-Литтон

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Alice, or the Mysteries — Complete - Эдвард Бульвер-Литтон


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in its security; and the other, from his habits and profession, would be a most excellent adviser.

      Of Mr. Douce, Lord Vargrave had seen but little; they were not thrown together. But Lord Vargrave, who thought every rich man might, some time or other, become a desirable acquaintance, regularly asked him once every year to dinner; and twice in return he had dined with Mr. Douce, in one of the most splendid villas, and off some of the most splendid plate it had ever been his fortune to witness and to envy!—so that the little favour he was about to ask was but a slight return for Lord Vargrave's condescension.

      He found the banker in his private sanctum, his carriage at the door; for it was just four o'clock, an hour in which Mr. Douce regularly departed to Caserta, as his aforesaid villa was somewhat affectedly styled.

      Mr. Douce was a small man, a nervous man; he did not seem quite master of his own limbs: when he bowed he seemed to be making you a present of his legs; when he sat down, he twitched first on one side, then on the other, thrust his hands into his pockets, then took them out, and looked at them, as if in astonishment, then seized upon a pen, by which they were luckily provided with incessant occupation. Meanwhile, there was what might fairly be called a constant play of countenance: first he smiled, then looked grave; now raised his eyebrows, till they rose like rainbows, to the horizon of his pale, straw-coloured hair; and next darted them down, like an avalanche, over the twinkling, restless, fluttering, little blue eyes, which then became almost invisible. Mr. Douce had, in fact, all the appearance of a painfully shy man, which was the more strange, as he had the reputation of enterprise, and even audacity, in the business of his profession, and was fond of the society of the great.

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      1

      "All our reasoning reduces itself to yielding to sentiment."

      2

      "Even in beauty there exists the power of virtue."

      3

      "I number not the hours, unless sunny."

      4

      "But in understanding your natural condition, use the means which are proper to it; and pretend not to govern by any other way than by that which constitutes you governor."

      5

      "The spirit of man is more penetrating than logical, and gathers more than it can garner."

      6

      "Furl your sails, and let the next boat carry you to the shore."

      7

      The object of parochial reform is not that of economy alone;

      not merely to reduce poor-rates.  The ratepayer ought to remember that the more he wrests

1

"All our reasoning reduces itself to yielding to sentiment."

2

"Even in beauty there exists the power of virtue."

3

"I number not the hours, unless sunny."

4

"But in understanding your natural condition, use the means which are proper to it; and pretend not to govern by any other way than by that which constitutes you governor."

5

"The spirit of man is more penetrating than logical, and gathers more than it can garner."

6

"Furl your sails, and let the next boat carry you to the shore."

7

The object of parochial reform is not that of economy alone;

not merely to reduce poor-rates.  The ratepayer ought to remember that the more he wrests from the grip of the sturdy mendicant, the more he ought to bestow on undeserved distress.  Without the mitigations of private virtue, every law that benevolists could make would be harsh.

8

"Now this, now that, distracts the active mind."


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